"Yes," said Butscha, and he repeated Modeste's speech about disguises.
Poor Ernest flung himself upon a bench and held his head in his hands.
He could not keep back his tears, and he did not wish Butscha to see
them; but the dwarf was the very man to guess his emotion.
"What troubles you?" he asked.
"She is right!" cried Ernest, springing up; "I am a wretch."
And he related the deception into which Canalis had led him when
Modeste's first letter was received, carefully pointing out to Butscha
that he had wished to undeceive the young girl before she herself took
off the mask, and apostrophizing, in rather juvenile fashion, his
luckless destiny. Butscha sympathetically understood the love in the
flavor and vigor of his simple language, and in his deep and genuine
anxiety.
"But why don't you show yourself to Mademoiselle Modeste for what you
are?" he said; "why do you let your rival do his exercises?"
"Have you never felt your throat tighten when you wished to speak to
her?" cried La Briere; "is there never a strange feeling in the roots
of your hair and on the surface of your skin when she looks at you,
--even if she is thinking of something else?"
"But you had sufficient judgment to show displeasure when she as good
as told her excellent father that he was a dolt.
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